TLDR - All my refrigeration experience is with high end environmental chambers and I want to become a commercial HVAC-R service tech. Do I have any chance at getting hired?

So right now I have a few years of experience working as an environmental chamber tech. Basically, I’m the in house guy wo sets up, tunes, and troubleshoots new and returned environmental chambers. These are some pretty complex and varied machines refrigeration wise. Some are single phase, some are 3 phase, some use single stage refrigeration, some use cascade refrigeration, some use water cooled condensers, some utilize liquid nitrogen, some are designed to have ultra high ramp rates, some are designed to be ultra precise, some use 5.5hp compressors, some use a tiny dc compressor the size of my fist. So I think I know my way around the refrigeration side of things fairly well.

The thing is this is this is all I have done professionally in regards to refrigeration. I have never professionally worked on any heating appliance (I have worked on them personally) and I’ve never been a field service tech. The more I think about it the more this feels like a sports car factory tech applying to work in a diesel truck shop. I know a lot of the principles as far as electrical and refrigeration troubleshooting goes. I know how to read schematics. I’m 608 universal certified. I know how to recover, vac, and charge a system. I know how to braze. I know how to set/measure superheat and subcool. I know I can learn whatever I don’t know fairly quickly. But is that actually enough for them to be willing to give me a van and set me loose upon unsuspecting customers?

Either way, I’d be interested to hear what you actual service techs think. If I put in an application do I have a shot?